WILLIAM V. GALLO, Magistrate Judge.
Before the Court is the Amended Petition to Approve Compromise of the Claim of Minor Hayley Lozano Riddle and the Amended Petition to Approve Compromise of the Claim of Minor Max Riddle ("Amended Petitions"). (Doc. Nos. 24, 25.) The Amended Petitions embody the agreement reached by the two minor plaintiffs-Hayley Lozano Riddle and Max W. Riddle ("Minor Plaintiffs"), each represented by a Guardian ad Litem appointed by the Honorable John S. Meyer of the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego—and Plaintiff Mayra L. Riddle ("Adult Plaintiff")
The Amended Petitions represent the Parties' compromise of the wrongful death claim brought by Plaintiffs as a result of the death of Mr. Shaun William Riddle, the father of Minor Plaintiffs and the husband of the Adult Plaintiff. (Doc. No. 24, at 2; Doc. No. 25, at 2.) The action was initiated by a complaint filed in the Superior Court of the State of California, County of San Diego, on April 1, 2014. (Doc. No. 1, at 2.) This action was removed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of California on May 16, 2014. (Doc. No. 1.) Amtrak filed an answer on May 23, 2014. (Doc. No. 4.) In October 2014, the Parties reached an agreement resolving this action. (Doc. No. 24, at 2; Doc. No. 25, at 2.) On October 17, 2014, Plaintiffs submitted the Motion to Approve Compromise of the Claim of Minor Hayley Lozano Riddle and the Motion to Approve Compromise of the Claim of Minor Max Riddle. (Doc. Nos. 23, 24.) In response to this Court's preliminary concerns, sent to Plaintiff Counsel by email on October 21, 2014, Plaintiff Counsel replaced these first iterations with the Amended Petitions now before the Court. On October 30, 2014, the Honorable Janis L. Sammartino of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California referred this entire action to this Court ("Referral Order"). (Doc. No. 26.)
In sundry provisions, the Amended Petitions provide a slew of pertinent numbers. Defendant will pay $125,000 to Mayra Riddle, $50,000 to Hayley Riddle, and $50,000 to Max Riddle, a total payout of $225,000. (Doc. No. 24, at 3; Doc. No. 25, at 3.) Originally, a workers' compensation lien of over $300,000 existed; it now stands at $50,000. (Doc. No. 24, at 4; Doc. No. 25, at 4.) Per the Amended Petitions, from each minors' allotment and reflecting their proportional share of the relevant fees, costs, and liens, three sums are to be subtracted: $16,667.67 (Plaintiff Counsel's fees), $2,262.35 (fees and expenses incurred), and $11,110 (workers' lien). (Doc. No. 24, at 3; Doc. No. 25, at 3.) Notably, while the lawyers' fees reflect 33% of each minor's share (Doc. No. 24, at 3; Doc. No. 25, at 3), the Attorney/Client Retainer Agreements
To justify its fees and costs, Plaintiff Counsel documented its efforts in two declarations, submitted under oath by its senior trial lawyer, Mr. Joseph M. Barrett, Esq., and appended to the Amended Petitions pursuant to this Court's request ("Declarations"). (Doc. No. 24, at 7-17; Doc. No. 25, at 7-17.) Having not kept detailed time sheets and thus forced to rely on the scanty "records kept and [its own] knowledge," Plaintiff Counsel "believe[s]" itself to have spent between 400 and 500 hours on this case." (Doc. No. 24, at 8; Doc. No. 25, at 8.) The hours were spent researching numerous legal issues and other Amtrak-related litigation, obtaining the relevant police report, conferring with the Parties and Amtrak's representatives, preparing and answering various discovery requests, personally evaluating the accident scene, and interviewing and retaining one named and several unnamed experts, Plaintiff Counsel having determined that this case's successful prosecution necessitated "various areas of expertise." (Doc. No. 24, at 8-15; Doc. No. 25, at 8-15.) Many meetings were held for disparate purposes, including brainstorming and debating venue and jurisdiction. (Doc. No. 24, at 14; Doc. No. 25, at 14.) "Sometimes," conferences between senior Plaintiff Counsel were "extended and comprehensive." (Doc. No. 24, at 17; Doc. No. 25, at 17.) Because Plaintiffs' "analysis told . . . [them] that this was a potentially winnable case, because the physics of the event suggested that the train could have in fact anticipated the presence of . . . [decedent's] tow vehicle on the Chesterfield Drive, and had the potential to avoid it," Plaintiff Counsel focused on gathering and producing evidence. (Doc. No. 24, at 15; Doc. No. 25, at 15.) While explor[ing] settlement discussions," Plaintiff Counsel attempted to minimize costs and eventually decided to concentrate on the settlement efforts that culminated in the Amended Petitions. (Doc. No. 24, at 16; Doc. No. 25, at 16.)
The Referral Order authorizes this Court "to conduct all proceedings and order entry of a final judgment in accordance with Civil Local Rules 17.1, 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), and Fed. R. Civ. P. 73." (Doc. No. 26.). Civil Rule 17.1 governs actions involving minors or incompetents. S.D. Cal. Civ. R. 1.7. Section 636(c) of Title 28 allows a United States Magistrate Judge to conduct any or all proceedings in a jury or nonjury civil matter and order entry of final judgment "when specifically designated to exercise such jurisdiction by the district court" and with the parties' consent. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c);
In a federal proceeding such as this one, a lawyer's conduct, including his or her proper share of any potential settlement between his or her client and one or more defendants, is governed by the ethical rules of the relevant federal court.
When a settlement implicates a minor's interests, as the Amended Petitions do, a special duty to dissect the merits arises under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. As the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has explained, this special duty "to safeguard the interests of litigants who are minors" is rooted in the language of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17(c)(2) ("Rule 17(c)(2)"), which states: "The court must appoint a guardian ad litem—or issue another appropriate order—to protect a minor or incompetent person who is unrepresented in an action." FED. R. CIV. P. 17(c)(2) (emphasis added),
In a more roundabout manner, California's Rules of Court apply with equal force. In this district, a lawyer's conduct is governed by Southern District of California Civil Rule 83.4. S.D. CAL. CIV. R. 83.4. Pursuant to its second paragraph, "[e]very member of the bar of this court and any attorney permitted to practice in this court must . . . comply with the standard of professional conduct required by members of the State Bar of California, and decisions of any court applicable professional conduct which are now adopted as standard of professional conduct of this court." S.D. CAL. CIV. R. 83.4(b).
Aside from this reigning standard, this Court cannot but take note of a well-established fact. In contingency fee systems, lawyers assume the risk of receiving no fee or a low fee for a share of any recovery. Lester Brickman, Contingency Fee Abuses, Ethical Mandates, and the Disciplinary System: The Case Against Case-by-Case Enforcement of Contingency Fees, 53 WASH. & LEE. L. REV. 1339, 1347 & n.27 (1996). An elevated fee is typically only permitted if the lawyer bears meaningful risk.
While some of the representations made in the Declarations beg for corroboration, the Court finds the fee to be reasonable and fair overall and that the Amended Petitions adequately protect the Minor Plaintiffs' interests.
Based on the Declarations, ten of the fifteen factors enumerated in California Rule of Court 7.955(b) are either inapplicable or not directly relevant. Neither declaration implies that Plaintiff's counsel labored under any temporal constraints imposed by the Guardian ad Litem. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(5). The relationship between this minors' representative and Plaintiff Counsel was neither personal nor preestablished; no hint of manipulation by the latter of the former so as to harm the minors can be gleaned from the existing record. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(6). No suggestion that this representation precluded Plaintiff's counsel from performing other services graces the Declarations, and the Guardian ad Litem for each Minor Plaintiff gave her informed consent to the distribution at issue. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(11), (9). Based on the Parties' papers, no federal or state law sets specific requirements as to a lawyer's representation in this kind of unique federal action. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(14). The expertise of Plaintiff's counsel is just as irrelevant, as the fee sought in the lower end of the standard range and by no means an apparent premium for some specialized legal expertise. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(7); Brickman, Contingency Fee Abuses, 53 WASH. & LEE. L. REV. at 1347. As the suggested fee does not reflect the costs advanced by the Plaintiffs, which are tabulated separately from the contingency percentage, and do not appear to be excessive in light of the Declarations, this factor has no decided bearing on the fees' reasonableness. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(13)(B). Relatedly, Plaintiff Counsel has not formally claimed any unwarranted delay between the costs expanded and the recuperation it anticipates, depriving one more factor of much decisive weight. CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(13)(C). The fact that a minor is involved obviously matters, CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(1), as does the fact that the fee is contingent, CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(12)-(13), but both these verities guide the application of the remaining factors rather than themselves affect the relevant scale.
At its most basic, the remaining factors-the amount of the fee in proportion to the services' value, the skills necessary to successfully ligate this case, the amount involved and the results obtained, time and labor required and expanded, and the risk of loss borne by Plaintiff Counsel, CAL. R. CT. 7.955(b)(2)-(4), (6), (13)(A)—and Rule 17(c)(2) share a focus: whether a counsel has performed work and incurred risk commiserate with a particular contingent fee percentage. In other words, in considering the Amended Petitions' reasonableness, the question this Court must ask is whether the Minor Plaintiffs obtained a decided financial benefit due to Plaintiff Counsel's efforts, fairly valued. Whether perfect symmetry between effort and fee exists (or can even be posited) is neither knowable nor required. Reasonableness is the singular touchstone under both the California Rules of Court and Rule 17(c)(2). CAL. R. CT. 7.955(a);
In reviewing the record, which mostly consists of the Declarations, the Court concludes the Amended Petitions award Plaintiff Counsel a reasonable share and adequately protects the Minor Plaintiffs' interests. In the underlying action, the Minor Plaintiffs possessed no certainty of a cent's recovery from Amtrak for its alleged negligence, and Amtrak's liability was not an established and certain legal fact at the complaint's initial filing. As such, Plaintiff Counsel did assume an unknown risk at the case's commencement, and it did net the Minor Plaintiffs a settlement without the hassle of a trial and one not necessarily merited by facts, both provable and admissible.
For the aforementioned reasons, this Court GRANTS the Amended Petitions subject with the following three changes incorporated into both documents by this order: (1) the final share for each Minor Plaintiff is to be changed from "$19,960.99" to "$19,960.98" in both of the Amended Petitions; (2) each Minor Plaintiff's share is to be accurately stated in both Amended Petitions' Section II.7, "$2,262.53" replaced with "$2,262.35"; and (3) the original dollar amount of the workers' compensation lien is to be added to that same Section of the Amended Petitions.
IT IS SO ORDERED.